User talk:Stevietheman

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Notice to Editors

I am actively avoiding toxic discussions and political forum-style debates.
I am fully active on Wikipedia and welcome collaborative, civil discussions regarding any encyclopedia work or site tasks. However, I will not engage in any highly charged threads. Please do not ping me into such discussions. Uncivil or off-topic comments left on this page will be removed per WP:TALK. Further, I may choose to turn off pinging altogether periodically.

📰 WikiProject Louisville News
  The latest updates from WikiProject Louisville:
🗞️ June 25, 2026
🗞️ June 13, 2026
Thomas Massie is our most popular article for May. Massie serves as U.S. representative from Kentucky's 4th congressional district, which includes portions of the Louisville metropolitan area. Tom Cruise was #2, and Abraham Lincoln was #3. Lincoln's article, plus some related articles, were recently added to our project so as to better cover topics from around the Louisville combined statistical area. Lincoln was born in the southern reaches of this area (LaRue County).
🗞️ May 13, 2026
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for April. Muhammad Ali was #2, and Jennifer Lawrence was #3.
🗞️ April 27, 2026
🗞️ April 13, 2026
🗞️ April 12, 2026
Rick Pitino is our most popular article for March. The former head basketball coach at the University of Louisville for 16 years, Pitino today holds this position for St. John's University. Tom Cruise was #2, and Jennifer Lawrence was #3.
🗞️ March 12, 2026
Rondale Moore is our most popular article for February. Hailing from New Albany, Moore was a wide receiver in the National Football League, after playing for the Purdue Boilermakers, where he was named a consensus All-American as a freshman. Area congressman Thomas Massie was #2, and Tom Cruise was #3.
🗞️ February 12, 2026
Jennifer Lawrence is our most popular article for January. Tom Cruise was #2, and Muhammad Ali was #3.
🗞️ January 21, 2026
🗞️ January 13, 2026
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for December, the 18th time in the past 25 months. Jennifer Lawrence was #2, and Muhammad Ali was #3.
🗞️ January 12, 2026
There's now over 24,000 individual pages, including talk pages, included in WikiProject Louisville.
🗞️ December 22, 2025
UPS Airlines Flight 2976 is, as predicted, our most popular article for November, with over 1.3 million views! Jennifer Lawrence was #2 with over 600K views, and Tom Cruise was #3 with nearly 500K views.
🗞️ November 12, 2025
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for October, the 17th time in the past 23 months. Also interesting is we likely already know November's most popular article. UPS Airlines Flight 2976 has already received twice as many views so far in November than the article for Cruise received in all of October. This has been a very intense and horrifying period in Louisville's history, and the deadliest local aviation accident since 1953, leaving 15 people dead and many injured.
🗞️ October 12, 2025
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for September, the 16th time in the past 22 months.
🗞️ September 12, 2025
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for August, the 15th time in the past 21 months. Interestingly, Lee Corso is a close second. Corso, head coach for Louisville Cardinals football from 1969 to 1972, recently retired from his longtime TV gig as an analyst on ESPN's College GameDay.
🗞️ August 12, 2025
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for July, the 14th time in the past 20 months.
🗞️ July 11, 2025
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for June, the 13th time in the past 19 months.
🗞️ June 14, 2025
Battle of Corydon was demoted from being a featured article.
🗞️ June 11, 2025
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for May, the twelfth time in the past eighteen months.
🗞️ June 6, 2025
There's now over 23,000 individual pages, including talk pages, included in WikiProject Louisville.
🗞️ May 11, 2025
🗞️ April 11, 2025
🗞️ March 11, 2025
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for February, the eleventh time in the past fifteen months.
🗞️ February 10, 2025
🗞️ January 9, 2025
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for December, the tenth time in the past thirteen months.
🗞️ December 9, 2024
Muhammad Ali is our most popular article for November.
🗞️ November 9, 2024
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for October, the ninth time in the past eleven months.
🗞️ November 1, 2024
Big Four Bridge was delisted as a good article.
🗞️ October 10, 2024
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for September, the eighth time in the past ten months.
🗞️ September 10, 2024
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for August, the seventh time in the past nine months.
🗞️ August 26, 2024
Aaron Hertzman becomes a good article. This brings us again to 70 in total!
🗞️ August 12, 2024
Basil W. Duke was delisted as a good article.
🗞️ August 10, 2024
Andy Beshear is our most popular article for July. Beshear, recently a contender for the nomination of Vice President of the United States in the Democratic Party, is the 63rd Governor of Kentucky, currently serving in his second term. He and Lieutenant Governor Jacqueline Coleman are the only Democratic statewide elected officials in Kentucky.
🗞️ July 17, 2024
Breonna Taylor becomes a good article. This brings us to 70 in total!
🗞️ July 10, 2024
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for June, the sixth time in the past seven months.
🗞️ July 9, 2024
WDRB becomes a good article.
🗞️ June 23, 2024
There's now over 7,000 articles included in WikiProject Louisville.
🗞️ June 10, 2024
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for May, the fifth time in the past six months. Also of note are the rankings of articles related to local annual or special events, with Kentucky Derby at #4, Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing (United States) at #6, Valhalla Golf Club at #9, 2024 Kentucky Derby at #16, Mint julep at #21, 2023 Kentucky Derby at #23, and 2024 PGA Championship at #36.
🗞️ May 24, 2024
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for April, the fourth time in the past five months.
🗞️ May 22, 2024
There's now over 22,000 individual pages, including talk pages, included in WikiProject Louisville.
🗞️ May 7, 2024
🗞️ April 9, 2024
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for March, the third time in the past four months.
🗞️ March 8, 2024
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for February, the second time in the past three months.
🗞️ February 29, 2024
There's now over 21,000 individual pages, including talk pages, included in WikiProject Louisville.
🗞️ February 9, 2024
Lamar Jackson is our most popular article for January. Jackson, American football player and Heisman Trophy winner who played for the Louisville Cardinals for three seasons before entering the NFL draft, is currently playing for the Baltimore Ravens. With the Ravens, he became the second unanimous Most Valuable Player (MVP) and the fourth African-American quarterback to win the award.
🗞️ January 13, 2024
WikiProject Louisville finally now has a barnstar, The Louisville Barnstar! Use this award to show other Wikipedians your appreciation for work they have done on Louisville area-related articles and other pages. Just place the barnstar (per usage instructions) in a new discussion on their talk page and you're good to go.
🗞️ January 8, 2024
Tom Cruise is our most popular article for December, barely edging out the 2nd-place Jennifer Lawrence. Although not covered explicitly in his article, the popular, box-office-busting movie actor and three-time Golden Globe winner Cruise attended St. X High School in Louisville for a couple years, and his parents are from the city.
🗞️ December 28, 2023
There's now over 20,000 individual pages, including talk pages, included in WikiProject Louisville.
🗞️ December 12, 2023
For the second time in our project's history, there's now over 19,000 individual pages, including talk pages, included in WikiProject Louisville.
🗞️ December 8, 2023
Jennifer Lawrence is our most popular article for November. This is the second month in a row. Also note Louisville-born/raised rapper Jack Harlow appearing anew in our upper tier at #3 – his article was inexplicably not included in our project until November 9.
🗞️ December 3, 2023
Check out WikiProject Louisville's new Participation and outreach department, developed per Wikipedia's recently determined consensus for moving away from the membership (club) model and toward a participation (action center) model for wikiprojects. Membership was never required to help with our project's tasks, but this change underscores it. All project pages (including templates) have been revised for this purpose. Please direct any questions/concerns to our talk page.
🗞️ November 8, 2023
Jennifer Lawrence is our most popular article for October. Lawrence, an Academy Award winner and the world's highest paid actress for two straight years, was born and raised in what is today Louisville Metro.
🗞️ October 24, 2023
For the second time in our project's history, there's now over 6,000 articles included in WikiProject Louisville.
🗞️ October 21, 2023
WikiProject Louisville now uses a full interactive map to show its coverage area. Also, be sure to look around the rest of our project pages to see everything that's updated and new.
🗞️ October 10, 2023
WikiProject Louisville's Assessment department has been revamped from top to bottom. Hopefully no more outdated info. Please direct any questions/concerns to our talk page.
🗞️ October 8, 2023
Deion Sanders is our most popular article for September. Sanders, a former NFL and MLB player and currently the head coach of Colorado Buffaloes football, played for the Louisville RiverBats (today known as the Bats) for two seasons (2000–01).
🗞️ October 3, 2023
WikiProject Louisville is reactivated, with a new coat of paint and updated action items! Also please feel free to show our news updates by adding the {{WPLouNews}} template to your user pages or other appropriate Wikipedia pages.
🗞️ July 29, 2023
Sherman Minton was demoted from being a featured article.
🗞️ June 22, 2023
🗞️ May 13, 2023
Phil Simms was delisted as a good article.
🗞️ March 22, 2023
🗞️ November 23, 2022
🗞️ May 9, 2022
🗞️ March 13, 2022
🗞️ January 4, 2022
🗞️ December 28, 2021

Archive of news items over 5 years old

🗞️ June 7, 2006
WikiProject Louisville begins.

This week's article for improvement (week 25, 2026)


Hello, StefenTower. The article for improvement of the week is:

Khoekhoe

Please be bold and help improve it!


Previous selections: Drinking water  Articulated bus


Get involved with the AFI project: Nominate an article  Review nominations


Posted by: MusikBot talk 00:05, 15 June 2026 (UTC) using MediaWiki message delivery (talk) on behalf of WikiProject AFI •

Tech News: 2026-25

MediaWiki message delivery 16:47, 15 June 2026 (UTC)

COI disclosure and sourcing discussion for Arrested Youth article

Hi StefenTower,

I hope you don't mind the note. I'm Ian Johnson (Arrested Youth), the subject of the article.

I recently posted a COI disclosure and sourcing discussion on the article's Talk page because I noticed the page currently has maintenance tags related to sourcing, primary sources, and notability concerns. Rather than editing the article directly, I followed Wikipedia's COI guidance and posted several independent sources there for editors to review if they find them useful.

Talk page discussion: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Arrested_Youth_(musician)

I noticed from the Talk page history that you had previously commented regarding the availability of additional reliable sources, so I thought I would make sure you were aware of the discussion.

I've continued gathering independent coverage from publications including American Songwriter, Alternative Press, New Noise Magazine, FLOOD, The Aquarian, LEO Weekly, Sacramento Bee, and others, along with additional independent coverage related to the Twenty One Pilots Takeover Tour.

I understand that, as the subject, I should avoid directly editing the article myself, so I have limited my involvement to collecting sources and posting them on the Talk page for independent review.

Thank you for your time and for your work on Wikipedia.

Ianmichaelj (talk) 23:01, 17 June 2026 (UTC)

Reorienting my editing strategy

I have decided to make changes to what I work on in the Wikipedia, to serve these purposes:

  1. Do much more of what I enjoy doing, and much less of what I don't.
  2. Make my watchlist less naggy and thieving of my time.
  3. Tilt my article work toward those articles which have a higher personal priority for me to give attention to.
  4. Concentrate more on tech work (including database reports) and project work (this is typically work that won't happen at all unless I do it, and it generally tends to be great fun for me).
  5. Pace myself more on AWB runs (like for fixing typos), with limits on the time I allot to them.
  6. Make it easier to break away for non-wiki work and life tasks in general.

The first three purposes come from my new thinking: "Other editors are or should be here, and thus I don't have to do it all or monitor it all. I will trust other editors to fill in gaps I leave and fix some of the issues I normally fix." All six are about dealing with some real burnout I'm feeling. I want to have more fun with this work, or else I might have to give it up entirely, and that would not be not my preference.

Thanks for reading and understanding. the Stefen 𝕋ower 23:34, 18 June 2026 (UTC)

Wikifunctions & Abstract Wikipedia Newsletter #253 is out: The or not the, this is (the?) question

There is a new update for Abstract Wikipedia and Wikifunctions. Please, come and read it!

In this issue, we present you a delicate question regarding grammatical framework, we talk about our next events and about the results of our latest online meetings, we discuss news about Types, and we take a look at the latest software developments.

Want to catch up with the previous updates? Check our archive!

Enjoy the reading! -- User:Sannita (WMF) (talk) 12:34, 19 June 2026 (UTC)

The Signpost: 21 June 2026

This week's article for improvement (week 26, 2026)


Injuries to humans elicit an elaborate response including emergency medicine, trauma surgery (pictured), and pain management.
Hello, StefenTower. The article for improvement of the week is:

Injury

Please be bold and help improve it!


Previous selections: Khoekhoe  Drinking water


Get involved with the AFI project: Nominate an article  Review nominations


Posted by: MusikBot talk 00:05, 22 June 2026 (UTC) using MediaWiki message delivery (talk) on behalf of WikiProject AFI •

Tech News: 2026-26

MediaWiki message delivery 13:03, 23 June 2026 (UTC)

Wikimedia Foundation Bulletin 2026 Issue 11

MediaWiki message delivery 22:38, 23 June 2026 (UTC)

Wikifunctions & Abstract Wikipedia Newsletter #254: Working on Functions, together

There is a new update for Abstract Wikipedia and Wikifunctions. Please, come and read it!

In this issue, we report on new collaborative patterns emerging in our community, we discuss news in Types, we share some events that relate to Wikifunctions and Abstract Wikipedia at Wikimania 2026, and we take a look at the latest software developments.

Want to catch up with the previous updates? Check our archive!

Also, we remind you that if you have questions or ideas to discuss, the next Volunteers' Corner will be held on July 6, at 17:30 UTC (link to the meeting).

Enjoy the reading! -- User:Sannita (WMF) (talk) 09:58, 27 June 2026 (UTC)

Fourth Street Live!

If spacing the rest of the years (May 2017 – 2018) does not fix the issue, then when is using spaces for such appropriate? Aspifi (talk) 22:18, 27 June 2026 (UTC)

I had pointed you to MOS:DATERANGE. It explains everything. the Stefen 𝕋ower 22:20, 27 June 2026 (UTC)
I get it now - if it's "April 2003 – June 2004" that has to be spaced because it's between months in different years. But "May 2017–2018" remains unspaced because the "2017–2018" is still yearyear. Aspifi (talk) 22:28, 27 June 2026 (UTC)
(talk page stalker) That's not quite right. "May 2017 through (sometime in) 2018" would be spaced, "May 2017 – 2018". The implied "sometime in the second year" is an unusual way to write a date range, which is why it is so confusing. – Jonesey95 (talk) 16:04, 28 June 2026 (UTC)
The "2017–2018" portion is still year-year. The policy does not state that it should be spaced if only one side is spaced but the other isn't. Aspifi (talk) 16:27, 28 June 2026 (UTC)
Yes, it's year to year, but the presence of "May" means that spaces are required. The relevant guidance is "if the modifier applies to only one of the two endpoints of the range, use a spaced en dash". It's the same as "c. 800 – 875"; when there are multiple elements on one or more sides of the dash, spaces are needed. – Jonesey95 (talk) 18:02, 28 June 2026 (UTC)

This week's article for improvement (week 27, 2026)


Akkawi cheese served with cherries
Hello, StefenTower. The article for improvement of the week is:

List of Syrian cheeses

Please be bold and help improve it!


Previous selections: Injury  Khoekhoe


Get involved with the AFI project: Nominate an article  Review nominations


Posted by: MusikBot talk 00:05, 29 June 2026 (UTC) using MediaWiki message delivery (talk) on behalf of WikiProject AFI •